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NEW HAIR STYLES

Curls to Be the Fashion No sooner is the month of March ushered in than the question is asked on all sides: “What are the new season's hair dressing styles going to he like?” The answer this year is curls and more curls, and then more curls I again In other words, lor some months past a greater elaboration has been creeping into tho smart coiffure, and now the advance pictures from London, New York, and Paris show such a delightful variety of styles that no woman will , have any difficulty in choosing one to suit her particular i type of face and hair. There is no doubt that to adopt a different style of hair-dressing occasionally is as necessary as to buy a new' hat. and a sudden outburst of curls in a new place or an altered parting or neckline acts like a tonic on ; all of us. Let us hear what say Antoine, the | greatest of Continental hairdressers, I from whose luxurious salons come the j smartest dictates of hair styles for 1935. “Curls.” says this far-famed Atu toine, “have been moving steadily higher on the head for some time, and now we find them boldly advancing ‘over the top.’ ” This docs not mean any suggestion of “fuzziness.” In fact, the influence of the sculptor’s art is unmistakenly revealed in the smoothly brushed hairlines and the neatness and precision of the curls I wherever they may be placed. It need hardly be said that the per- , manent wave is more than ever necesi sary this season, especially that type i of wave which bestows on us crisply- | curling ends and allows of large, i smooth undulations from forehead to crown. Antoine outlined five styles which i he believes include all the features I which will be the correct thing among I smart women this year. The first style is the perfect mode , for the sophisticated brunette. It ! consists of a smooth line without parting. from forehead to nape, a swirled l neckline, and all the curls coiled ImI hind one ear and secured with a jew- ! oiled pm. This style is perfect for tne ' unman with a round, well-shaped head Ihe next style is for a blonde whose face is rather oval than round It goes I to the other extreme and sweens the i hair forward from the crown to the I very eyebrows ■ style number three shows the ♦op | lock brushed straight back to reveal a I lovelv peak, while separate strands ’ from the temples are swerved into f snail-like curls high over the •ars. I Remember that curls this seasofi must ! be ven trim ami formal. Gone are ! the wind-blown lobs and fluffy styles I of former veais Yet another new effect can he gam--1 ed by piling the I,ack curls high up ' ' above the crown ul t In head I'or tins I also, the brow should be brushed I smoothie, with inly an enticing Empress Josephtn i nil in front ol the ear Ibis style is particularly lemi- . I nine and suitable, ol course, only with I an evening or smart afternoon toilet ’ ’ Style number five points to the tact II that «*r» are tin lotiger Biy storm

that they once were. The days when a woman hid her ears are as distant as those when she revealed her knees. In this mode the hair is dressed in smooth waves back from ears and brow, and an elongated cascade of curls falls from the crown ol the head to the nape. This particular type of hairdressing should only be adopted by the woman with a round or rather broad lace.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBTRIB19350318.2.105.3

Bibliographic details

Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXV, Issue 80, 18 March 1935, Page 11

Word Count
610

NEW HAIR STYLES Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXV, Issue 80, 18 March 1935, Page 11

NEW HAIR STYLES Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXV, Issue 80, 18 March 1935, Page 11

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